Hagane: The Final Conflict Explained

Hagane: The Final Conflict
Developer:CAProduction
Red Entertainment
Publisher:Hudson
Platforms:Super NES
Genre:Action, platform
Modes:Single-player
Composer:Takahito Abe
Artist:Keita Amemiya
Director:Kappa Yuzawa
Designer:Osamu Tsujikawa
Programmer:Izumi Fukuda

Hagane: The Final Conflict is a 1994 action-platform video game developed by CAProduction and Red Entertainment and published by Hudson for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. The player takes on the role of a ninja cyborg named Hagane on his path to take revenge on an opposing ninja faction. The game combines traditional Japanese ninja and samurai aesthetics with a futuristic setting. The player has a wide variety of weapons, moves, and attacks at their disposal to defeat enemies and progress through the game. Hagane released to positive reception, and was compared favorably to classic side-scrolling action games. Reviewers praised the controls, art design, and challenge but criticized the quality of the graphics and sound.

Gameplay

Hagane features side-scrolling action and platforming gameplay and blends elements of traditional Japanese ninja and samurai with a futuristic setting. The player controls Hagane, a ninja cyborg, and can switch between four different weapons: a sword, chain, shuriken, and grenades. Additionally, there are also limited magic attacks available which clear the screen of enemies. Hagane can execute a wide variety of moves including somersaults, flying jump kicks, wall-jumping, sliding, and charge attacks. After three hits the player will die, although the game provides health power-ups that will increase the player's health meter beyond three hits. After dying, these health bonuses are lost. All the stages feature platforming with the exception of one stage in which the player rides on a hovercraft through a Mode 7 sequence. The stages are notably short with very few checkpoints across the game. Running out of lives will place the player at the start of the chapter should they choose to continue.[1] There is no save feature, and the player can only continue up to seven times in the Japanese version before their game is over.

Plot

The Fuma and Koma ninja clans who live mainly in darkness have mastered the secret arts of ninjutsu and black magic. Although they look like normal humans, they have strength and spiritual power beyond normal. Each clan consists of several factions. The Fuma clan is split into factions based on the Chinese zodiac. The Koma clan is split into factions by color; consisting of the white, the gold and the red dragon. In the case of the Fuma clan, members of a given faction know nothing more about any other factions except that they exist and their bloodlines are cut off from the outside world and are destined to decline. The Fuma clan possesses extreme strength and spiritual power. Their duty is to protect the Holy Grail, which is said to possess power that can destroy the world. From long ago, the evil Koma clan had plotted to destroy the world using the destructive power of the Holy Grail.[2]

The Koma clan eventually attacked a faction of the Fuma clan and stole the Holy Grail. However, they failed to notice that among the severely wounded, one man survived. On the verge of death, the barely living man known as Hagane was brought back to life by advanced cyber-technology performed by a mysterious old man named Momochi. However, none of Hagane's body survived except his brain. Already a powerful ninja, he now had the incredible power and speed of a cyborg. With this power, he vowed to take revenge on the Koma clan. At the end of the conflict and having destroyed the Koma clan's complex, Hagane overlooks the scene from a cliff outcropping, satisfied. His purpose fulfilled, Hagane's glowing eyes fade to black and he passes on. As the credits roll, time and nature claim his seated form and rust his katana as a nearby tree grows unhindered by the blackened land.[2]

Release

Hagane was developed by CAProduction and published by Hudson Soft.[3] [4] It was released in Japan on November 18, 1994,[5] and later brought to North America in June 1995,[6] and Europe in April, 1995.

Reception

Nintendo Power praised Haganes challenging gameplay, non-stop action. and controls, comparing it to the Ninja Gaiden series. However, they criticized the game's lack of variation and sub-par graphics which they compared to a "good NES game".[7] GamePro also complimented the play control, as well as the Hagane's variety of special moves, but criticized the music as "techno Japanese rock at its most mundane". They found the graphics to be impressive but losing their appeal due to the repetitive enemies and environments. They concluded Hagane to be comparable with classic side-scrolling action games, but stopped short of calling it a classic itself due to the waning 16-bit market. They recommended the game to those looking for a nostalgic action gaming experience, but worthwhile only as a rental.[8] A reviewer for Next Generation complemented the game's dark and detailed graphics, the suitable enemy abundance and variety, and the player character's wide set of attacks. However he criticized the game's lack of originality, particularly what he saw as a striking resemblance to the Sega Genesis installments of the Shinobi series.[9] Game Informer magazine gave it an overall score of 7.5 [10] Maniac magazine gave the game an 82 out of 100.[11]

In a retrospective review, Kurt Kalata of Hardcore Gaming 101 called Hagane a "cult classic" and "sleeper hit" despite some lost potential. He found the gameplay to be heavily influenced by Shinobi III and overall challenging, although there were some frustrating platforming sequences. Additionally, he liked the wide variety of gameplay mechanics available but criticized the game design for not utilizing them. The set pieces and enemy sprites were praised for their detail, but the environments were found to be too dark and boring in tandem with the forgettable music. Kalata believed many of Haganes design flaws, such as enemy placement and level design, would have been alleviated in the hands of a more skilled developer.[1] In 1995, Total! ranked the game 45th on their Top 100 SNES Games writing: "The graphics are moody and the gameplay is not only fast but furious also. It’s classically demanding shooting action."[12]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kalata . Kurt . Hardcore Gaming 101: Hagane: The Final Conflict . Hardcore Gaming 101 . February 28, 2016 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304082317/http://www.hardcoregaming101.net/hagane/hagane.htm . March 4, 2016 .
  2. Book: Hagane: The Final Conflict. 1995. Hudson. Instruction manual, SNES, North America.
  3. Web site: CAProduction - 開発履歴 . CAProduction . https://web.archive.org/web/20070211174408/http://www.caproduction.co.jp/Product . February 11, 2007.
  4. Web site: 鋼 HAGANE . Hudson . https://web.archive.org/web/20040815040139/http://www.hudson.co.jp/gamenavi/gamedb/index.cgi?mode=info&f=Hagane . August 15, 2004 . November 12, 2018 . dead . mdy-all .
  5. 鋼 HAGANE [スーパーファミコン]]. Famitsu. Enterbrain, Inc.. July 31, 2018.
  6. Web site: Super NES Games. https://web.archive.org/web/20080920223937/http://www.nintendo.com/consumer/gameslist/manuals/snes_games.pdf. September 20, 2008. live. 2018-07-31. mdy-all.
  7. Now Playing: Hagane. Nintendo Power. 70. March 1995. 103,107.
  8. ProReview: Hagane. GamePro. 72. IDG. July 1995. 60.
  9. Hagane . Next Generation. 6. Imagine Media. June 1995. 113.
  10. Hagane- SNES. 1997-11-20. Game Informer. https://web.archive.org/web/19971120013552/http://www.gameinformer.com/jun95/hagane.html. November 20, 1997. dead. 2018-11-15.
  11. News: Hagane - im Klassik-Test (SNES) – MANIAC.de. 2018-02-07. MANIAC.de. 2018-11-20. de-DE.
  12. July 1995 . Top 100 SNES Games . Total! . 43 . 46 . March 2, 2022.